78 Mo. 567 | Mo. | 1883
This suit was instituted in August, 1879, to recover damages for injuries to plaintiff, a servant of defendant, alleged to have been caused by a defective handhold on the top of a box car from which plaintiff fell, while in the discharge of his duty as a brakeman at Pacific, a station on defendant’s 'road. The answer contained a general denial, a plea of contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part, and also negligence of plaintiff’s fellow-servants, and that the car was a foreign car, belonging to another road, and being hauled over defendant’s road.
The evidence tended to prove the following facts: The car in question, containing freight, was received by defendant at Kansas City from a connecting road, to be hauled to Cheltenham, a station on defendant’s road, near St. Louis. On the day of the accident, the plaintiff with an engineer, fireman and conductor, went from Labadie, a station on defendant’s road west of Pacific, with an engine and caboose car to Pacific, under orders to make up there a special train of freight cars, and take it to St. Louis. They arrived at Pacific between six and seven o’clock p. m., when it was so dark -as to require the use of lanterns in making up the train. While engaged in switching, plaintiff was ordered by the conductor to get on top of other box cars, attached to the car in question, pass along on the top of said cars and get down from the foreign car by mean's of a ladder on the side and near the end of said car, placed there to be so used, and pull out a coupling-pin by which said car was attached to a flat car. In obeying said order he slipped and fell, and the hand-hold, to which he held, breaking loose, he was precipitated to the ground, and received the injuries complained of.
The iron bolt by which one end of the hand-hold was
The court, of its own motion, gave the follqwing instructions to the jury:
1. It was the duty of defendant to furnish and supply to its employes or those engaged in running and operating its trains' of cars, machinery and appliances, such as ears and the various appliances thereto belonging, that were reasonably safe, secure and sufficient for the transaction of its business, and, in absence of notice to the contrary, the employes of defendant had the right to assume that the cars and appliances furnished to them with which to work were so safe, secure and sufficient. If you find, therefore, that defendant neglected its duty in this behalf, and that on the day specified in the petition William Condon was in the employ of defendant as brakeman, and was at said time engaged in the prudent and careful discharge of his duties
Although the jury may believe from the evidence that the car in question was a foreign car, (that is a car belonging to some other railroad company,) and that it had been received by defendant from such other company for purposes of transportation, and that when so received the hand-hold thereon was defective, yet, if the jury believe that such defect was known to defendant at and prior to the accident, or that by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, it might have been known and repaired, defendant is not excused by the fact that it was a foreign car and was in a defective condition when received. Nor is defendant excused by the fact that it had no actual knowledge of any defect in the car, if, by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence, it might have known of such defect prior to the accident.
2. If defendant kept car-inspectors' or repairers at Kansas City, St. Louis and other intermediate points, who wore charged by defendant with the special duty of examining into the condition of cars at those points and seeing that they were in running order and in safe and proper condition to be used before they were suffered to depart therefrom, then defendant is liable-to plaintiff for any neglect of duty on the part of such inspectors and repairers whereby plaintiff was injured, if the jury believe he was so injured in consequence of any such neglect of duty.
3. If the jury find for plaintiff, they will assess his
4. The mere fact that the injury resulted to plaintiff from a defect in the hand-hold, is not of itself sufficient to entitle him to recover, but the burden is upon plaintiff to show that defendant had notice of the defect, or that, by the exorcise of proper care, it might have known of it, and also to show that the accident happened from or by reason of the defect complained of in the petition.
5. If the jury believe from the evidence that the car from which the plaintiff fell and was injured was a foreign car, that is, a car which belonged to another railroad, and was received by defendant in the usual course of business, to be by it transported over its railroad, and that said car was not one of defendant’s own cars, then to entitle plaintiff to recover, the evidence must also show that the defect complained of in the hand-hold of said car existed at-the time said car was so received by defendant on its railroad-, and that defendant' knew, or by the exercise of proper care and caution might have known, that fact; or, the evidence must show that such defect arose after the said car was so received by defendant on its road by or from some negligence or fault of defendant; or that it arose, after the car was so received, without defendant’s fault, but that defendant knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care and diligence might have known, of the defect and repaired it, or given plaintiff warning thereof prior to the accident.
At defendant’s instance, the court instructed the jury that if they believed from the evidence “ that the injuries complained of were brought upon himself, in whole or in
It is objected to the petition that “it states conclusions and not facts.” I confess an inability to comprehend the meaning of counsel, in this objection. The petition states the position of the company toward employes — the duty of plaintiff as brakeman, and then proceeds to state the facts, showing the manner in which he fell and was injured. No conclusions of law are pleaded, and if there were, sufficient facts are alleged to constitute a cause of action.
The instructions given by the court of its own motion very fully and fairly declared the law applicable to the facts 2. instructions. which the evidence on either side tended to prove. Porter v. H & St. Jo. R. R. Co., 71 Mo. 66. The first of defendant’s refused instructions declares that “ the mere fact that the injuries to plaintiff resulted from the defect of the hand-hold, is not sufficient to entitle him to recover.” That is correct, but the court, in the second, sixth and seventh instructions given of its own motion, ex
The third refused declared that car-inspectors at the intermediate stations, were fellow-servants of plaintiff, and i. fellow-servant, that if the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury was attributable to any want of care or caution on their part, .defendant was not liable. Car-inspectors are not co-employes with trainmen. Long v. Pacific R’y Co., 65 Mo. 225.
The fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, thirteenth and fourteenth refused instructions are disposed of by what has been said 6. instructions. of those preceding them, and the fourth, fifth and tenth are vicious for the additional reason, that they withdraw from the jury the question whether-the car was defective as alleged, when received by defendant, and whether the defect, if it existed when so received, might have been known by defendant, if proper care and caution had been exercised by it. These instructions declare that there was no evidence tending to show either of these facts.
The eleventh refused was to the effect that defendant was not liable for an injury to plaintiff from a cause open to his observation, and that if the evidence showed that his opportunities of observing and knowing the condition of the hand-hold, were equal to or superior to those of defendant, he could not recover. This was correct as an abstract proposition of law, but the evidence clearly proved that plaintiff’, for the first time, went upon the car in question in discharge of duty as a brakeman after dark, and there was no evidence showing that he had ever seen it before, while the proof was that at Kansas City defendant had ample time and opportunity to inspect it thoroughly, and should have done so.
The thirteenth was but a repetition of the sixth given by the court, and was, therefore, properly refused, and the substance of the fourteenth was contained in the seventh given by the court of its own motion.
It is insisted by defendant’s counsel that defendant is not liable, because it was the duty of the conductor and brakeman to inspect the car, and report defects or repair them. It was not proved that such is their duty. That it is their duty, if they know of any defect, to report it to the car-repairer or repair it themselves, was shown, but they are not required to inspect the cars, and may assume that the inspectors have performed their duty, and that the car is all right. It is not pretended that the conductor, or other fellow-servants of the plaintiff, knew of the defect' com-
Many other questions are raised by appellant’s counsel in their brief and argument, which have not been overlooked, but the length which this opinion has already reached forbids particular notice, of them all. After a careful examination of the record, and points made, and authorities cited, we are satisfied that this cause was tried with exceptional fairness, and that no material error was committed by the circuit court in the progress of the trial. The j udgment is affirmed.